Oscar Romero

During his three years as archbishop of San Salvador, Oscar Romero became known as a fearless defender of the poor and suffering. His work on behalf of the oppressed earned him the admiration and love of the peasants he served and, finally, an assassin's bullet.

Acclaim

For those interested in the life, witness, and martyrdom of Romero (and we all should be), the book is an invaluable companion.

Mark Gordon, Patheos

A saint in every way we use the word, the life this book sketches is a timeless model for faithful political resistance and spiritual revival

Sojourners

Oscar Romero has so much to say to our church and our world today, and in The Scandal of Redemption we have been given an accessible way to read and spend time contemplating his encouraging words. My heart was set ablaze once again.

Tommy Tighe, Angelus News

A short and gorgeous introduction to the sermons of Oscar Romero. Breathtakingly beautiful and Christ-centered, these sermons are steeped in Romero's love for the poor and suffering in his own country. But even more powerful is his love and prayers for repentance and redemption for those in power who ultimately took his life and inadvertently amplified his message.

D.L. Mayfield

The Scandal of Redemption consists of excerpts from Archbishop Romero’s diary interspersed with passages from his homilies in which he denounces injustice and calls murder and torture by their names. He preaches to the oppressed and to men of violence alike, pointing them to the gospel of redemption and liberation.… Of this there is no doubt: Oscar Romero is a true martyr for Christ. He proclaimed God’s love and was prepared, like any good shepherd, to give his life for his sheep.

Cardinal Gerhard Müller, First Things

Archbishop Romero invites us to sanity and reflection, to respect for life and harmony.

Pope Francis

Oscar Romero was converted by suffering: the suffering of a friend, of the people he served, and then finally his own suffering. There are many ways to be converted, but perhaps the best way is to live among the poor and to discover in them, as Romero did, the presence of Christ.

Samuel Ruiz Garcia, Bishop of San Cristobal, Mexico

Romero does not speak from a distance. He does not hide his fears, his brokenness, his hesitations. It is as if he puts his arm around my shoulder and slowly walks with me. He shares my struggles. There is a warmth in his words that opens my heart to listen.